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On this trip, my autodidacticism became an exercise in unsuspended disbelief.
Most of his autodidacticism comes from reading books, which he prefers over traditional forms of education, including schooling.
He became interested in music, but preferred to learn it through autodidacticism rather than through formal artistic education.
She was forced to end school to support herself at the age of eleven, but educated herself by Autodidacticism and engaged in politics.
She is a vocal proponent for autodidacticism and individualist anarchism.
As a child, Parker was an avid reader, which was the beginning of his lifelong autodidacticism.
In a sense, autodidacticism is "learning on your own" or "by yourself", and an autodidact is a self-teacher.
Jelena Lieven was not formally educated but received a very high level of education through Autodidacticism.
Inquiry into autodidacticism has implications for learning theory, educational research, educational philosophy and educational psychology.
Pleas for autodidacticism echoed not only within close philosophical discussions; they surfaced in struggles for control between individuals and establishments.
Autodidacticism: (also autodidactism) Self-education or self-directed learning.
Typically used to convey the sense that a great individual has achieved a pinnacle of learning, that an automath has taken autodidacticism to an endpoint.
As a form of discovery learning, students in today's classrooms are being provided with more opportunity to "experience and interact" with knowledge, which has its roots in autodidacticism.
The incessant curiosity of the former playboy now took the shape of an enthusiastic autodidacticism coupled with the no less ardent desire to share his discoveries with everybody.
Her autodidacticism was remarkable, a testimony to the flourishing culture of newspapers, magazines, and books in provincial Chile, as well as to her personal determination and verbal genius.
In 1988, Negara entered ILW, a school of music in Jakarta, to gain his musical formal education, since he had his earlier knowledge just by autodidacticism learning.
His deft technique and unusual sense of vision and purpose, however, stand in sharp contrast to the commonly prescribed features of Art Brut, notably autodidacticism and dissociativism.
Some critics have focused on Rogers' lack of a formal education as a hindrance to producing scholarly work; others suggested Rogers' autodidacticism freed him from many academic and methodological restrictions.
Her autodidacticism is decidedly in the American literary tradition, but even more distinctly in the African-American tradition, especially in its insistence on controlling and maintaining her own oral storytelling voice.
Education in its general sense is a form of learning in which knowledge, skills, and habits of a group of people are transferred from one generation to the next through teaching, training, research, or simply through autodidacticism.
These alternatives, which include charter schools, alternative schools, independent schools, homeschooling and autodidacticism vary, but often emphasize the value of small class size, close relationships between students and teachers, and a sense of community.
Călinescu notably attributed Heliade's inconsistency to his "autodidacticism", which, he contended, was responsible for "[his] casual implication in all issues, the unexpected move from common sense ideas to the most insane theories".
The virtues and demerits of one man's autodidacticism have been argued loudly ever since Rimsky-Korsakov early in the century recreated from a rough and unschooled original a shining, well-oiled "Boris" in his own image.
The fact that Clarinda, probably a woman, composed and even published poetry despite widespread disdain for female writers in colonial Spanish America is typically depicted by feminist critics as a story of personal triumph via autodidacticism.
Ben-Zaken, Avner, "Taming the Mystic", in Reading Hayy Ibn-Yaqzan: A Cross-Cultural History of Autodidacticism (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011).